Showing posts with label meryl streep. Show all posts
Showing posts with label meryl streep. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 16, 2020

let them all talk


After the disappointing, ineffectual The Laundromat, I wasn't sure what to expect from another Soderbergh / Streep collaboration, but consider me pleasantly surprised by the layered, acerbic, and bittersweet Let Them All Talk. In the film, a novelist Alice (Meryl Streep) travels to England on a cruise to accept the prestigious / niche "Footling Prize" with her nephew Tyler (Lucas Hedges), two distant old college friends, Roberta (Candice Bergen) and Susan (Dianne Wiest) in tow. Meanwhile Alice's agent Karen (Gemma Chan) is secretly aboard to try to coax information from Tyler in hopes of Alice writing a follow-up to her Pulitzer-winning novel. If this "secret agent" side plot seems tenuous, it is--dipping into fairly fluffy caper comedy stuff but still enjoyable nevertheless with its skilled young actors at the helm. I viewed this film on HBO Max, a weird experience, as I can presently only access it on my phone, that probably doesn't do the movie much justice. Hopefully I can appreciate it in the theater someday. It is an extremely pleasing-looking picture: a buttery yellow-lensed (Soderbergh as Peter Andrews) Queen Mary 2 (as a non-cruisegoer, are cruises as lovely-looking and uncrowded-feeling as this one?) that's a luxurious watch even as it’s fraught with the unrequited on all fronts.


The film focuses upon language—evident in Alice’s portentously vague musings on “words.” What’s said and unsaid is scarred, awkward and tense, even with alcohol flowing. Between the relationships among these former friends who haven’t seen each other in over thirty years, Roberta doesn't even recognize "Al" anymore--not because of the way she looks, but the way she speaks. Deborah Eisenberg’s script, a brilliant debut screenplay, understands Alice’s universe well. Even if the moments of the plot can be on the flimsy side, perhaps purposefully flimsy (“plot-driven” novels of the famous thriller writer aboard the ship are pitched in a vein of light jabbing), the dialogue is sharply-realized and rhythmic. If there are notes of improvisation among the pro-players and their wry director, I wasn’t aware or distracted by it, instead, I felt the emotional calibrations of the interactions. I was taken aback to the sort of halting punchline rhythms of Lawrence Kasdan & Barbara Benedek’s The Big Chill. The dialogue is sparkly but not really overly distracting, inauthentically speedy nor talky—the silences are impactful as the barbed words. Soderbergh’s films, as absorbing and meandering as they can be, often tend to run their course and get baggy in their final acts, with unsatisfying endings. This movie, however, takes a nervy swerve that ends up changing the tone of a previous scene and also the characters’ previous actions in insightful, fascinating ways.



Besides the sharp screenplay, as usual, Steven Soderbergh's film delivers in the tech departments. Thomas Newman’s jazzy score is a very atypical Newman score (no twinkling pianos or chilly, sly American Beauty instrumentations or chord structures here). It may not be the best music to listen to on its own, but it’s essential to the film itself—a warm, frothy soundtrack that helps carry the mood and tone of the picture along. Between this, Unsane (which he composed under pseudonym) and Side Effects, Soderbergh and Newman have been a great team in recent years, with Soderbergh encouraging Newman's talents out of his usual output.


Another praiseworthy element on display are the costumes by Ellen Mirojnick. Contemporary work like this, including her dynamic effort on Soderbergh’s Logan Lucky, rarely get as many accolades as fantasy or period pieces, but Mirojnick's work shines again, offering comic touches while enriching characterization. There’s something bold and quietly desperate about Roberta’s animal print ensemble as she goes to the “gala” to meet a match or her penchant for fringy denim shirts. The costumes illuminate the separateness of the trio, often epitomizing each woman’s far-reaching geographical location (Seattle, NYC upper-class, and Dallas).


This is a fine ensemble to watch, especially the women in the film (Streep, Bergen, Wiest, and Chan). I was struck particularly by Candice Bergen. Roberta is out of a failed marriage. She blames it on Alice's famous novel which may have cribbed details from Roberta's life. Now Roberta is single and ready to mingle, hopefully with a Queen Mary 2 passenger with deep pockets. Through Bergen's complex turn, this isn't a pitiful character, it's a fascinating one. I, perhaps very unjustly, never thought of Bergen as a compelling thespian. This performance, however, is brassy, but also extremely sophisticated and understated. She has an uneasy, swaying gait and disposition. Her Texas twang comes and goes—perhaps by accident—or perhaps purposefully, when her character either wants to turn up the charm or the savagery. Bergen's comic timing, pained facial expressions, quick raised eyebrow, all kill from her beginning scene where she is dealing with an annoying, disgruntled character in the low-grade Victoria Secret knockoff store she works at. It is a high wire act to steal scenes from someone as ostentatious as Meryl. Viola Davis managed it in Doubt. Bergen does it for me here—the character of Roberta became real to me, despite the star power of the performer. Her presence, along with Wiest and Streep, all add to the poignancy of the movie: these actors in their later years, giving us some their best work. ***


-Jeffery Berg


Friday, December 22, 2017

the post


The overall feel of Steven Spielberg's entertaining The Post is a see-saw with one person on one end and no one on the other. Unlike Lincoln, which was precisely paced, this is an unbalanced picture, with vivid, wonkish details of the first and middle halves not quite delivering the goods in the finale. This could be due to Spielberg's dash to get the film made at this particular moment in America, but it also encapsulates, in a way, the sense of journalism itself--with the build of research and sources and interviews and blustery walks across the newsroom to an ultimately fleeting conclusion (there are some shots of wind-blown newspapers that are almost elegiac). The movie is shaped around its leads, Meryl Streep and Tom Hanks, as characters on the precipice and within the short aftermath of publishing the Pentagon Papers in The Washington Post. While a younger Spielberg may have made Katharine Graham and Ben Bradlee rosier and uncomplicated, the post-Lincoln Spielberg, along with Liz Hannah and Josh Singer's (Spotlight) snappy script, delves into Graham and Bradlee's cushiness with past Presidents and Robert McNamara himself. Spielberg portrays competitive capitalism as American as a lemonade stand with shares, profits, and beating rivals to the punch as much of the reasons why the Papers were hounded after in the first place. In some ways, one could construe a glimmer of Graham's eventual actions, as is also often the goal of many American historical pictures, to absolve oneself of guilt but her power is also rooted in her compassion.



Spielberg's supple manipulation and craftsmanship still can lead an audience to applause and / or tears.  His seasoned crew, including editors Michael Khan and Sarah Broshar, production designer Rick Carter and composer John Williams (one of his more unshowy, least remarkable scores, but one that works well as the cement holding it all together), all aide in Spielberg's savviness. Ann Roth's costumes, which floats out a soon-to-be-iconic caftan, are a dreamy set. I was mixed on Janusz Kaminski's cinematography which is both sort of muddy and gilded lily--figures edged with soft lamp light and sunlight; I felt sometimes I was sharing Graham's bad eyesight. Streep and Hanks who have had incredibly enduring careers are both excellent, charismatic, and fun to watch--at times, you can feel their characters' stress; it's strange that their combined on-screen chemistry hasn't been exploited before. There's also a good supporting ensemble scattered with the Spielbergian trope of doofusy guys and an especially slick turn by Bob Odenkirk.


In the ending of this year's I, Tonya, we are reminded how the media will pile on top of the past with  the next new thing. I am still intrigued somewhat with The Post's ending, its obvious coding of the moment in a sort of horror movie setup-for-a-sequel final note (a poster for The Blob is glimpsed in the opening, a movie that ended itself in the arctic with a loopy white question mark). It's a sly, devilish ending but also a hopeful one (a smattering of claps went through my audience)--a combination of notes that I don't think I've seen a Spielberg movie end on before. ***

-Jeffery Berg

Friday, December 27, 2013

how to scantron august: osage county


After my screening of August: Osage County my audience filled out opinion Scantrons. Was the movie too dark? Were the characters too unlikable? What drew us to the movie? The advertising? The Golden Globe nominations for Meryl Streep and Julia Roberts?

And herein lies a problem already with bringing an adaptation of Tracy Letts' play to screen in this current movie culture. Not having read or seen the play, I can't comment upon its merits, but his adaptation here offers some small and arresting moments in a sea (or rolling plain?) of clunky, heated melodrama. Directed by John Wells, a prolific TV producer, the movie is thick-salted, sometimes suddenly sweet, and a bit grindy and hammered out like the Weston clan's leftovers in the garbage disposal. Food comes to mind because the film's big moment is a roiling dinner scene, where the family's past, stress and anger comes to roost.

Streep is Vi, the Weston matriarch (a word that's been used in nearly every review and sort of pains me to use but is completely accurate, especially with Streep's commanding presence, coiffed black wig and that brooch she wears) suffering cancer. Her poet husband (Sam Shepard) goes off to kill himself, which brings Streep's kin together for the funeral. Even though I haven't been a fan of many of her recent movies, it's hard not to be impressed by Streep's continued success and astonishing career. August might be one of her better performances of late, perhaps because it's so purposefully showy and a bit hammy. She loosens up and has some fun and dishes out (so well and so coldly) some bitter one liners. And she also gets some cinematically canned but killer dramatic moments (that cowboy boot monologue) with all the Meryl tics we've come to love and hate.


Julia Roberts is one of the more complicated characters as Vi's daughter Barbara and sails with it pretty well. Some may enjoy seeing America's former sweetheart being angry and veiny and saying fuck a lot (I admit I found that fun here and in 2004's Closer, a far more successful and potent stage adaptation); though she doesn't get much credit for them, I think she does better in more acidic roles than the heroines of some of her 90s pictures. Her Barbara is an interesting character who is figuring out where to go in the midst of family upheavals; somehow Roberts communicates Barbara's baggage, earthiness and hurt.


While I enjoyed seeing Julia and Meryl work their scenes, I was more of a fan of the more naturalistic turns than the starry ones.  As Vi's sister, Margo Martindale is a breath of fresh air in the movie--literally she enters the movie trying to air the house out. For years, an unappreciated bit player, it's nice to see her get some striking moments here. Julianne Nicholson feels very authentic as Vi's daughter Ivy, though she's saddled with a sort of awkward subplot.  Many of the other actors are good (including laconic Chris Cooper) despite the way their characters sometimes feel superfluous.

Best thing about it is the hot, sickly atmosphere (and the actors, in small ways, help create it)--from the yellow-tinged plains which Barbara despises to the stuffiness of Vi's drab old house.  The cinematography by the talented Adriano Goldman highlights this beautifully and does well with light and playing with shadows on the actors' forlorn faces as they move about the house.  Unfortunately the film has a bumpy landing: a mystifyingly golden coda that doesn't suit the picture at all that suddenly morphs into "Waltons"-esque end title watercolors of the cast members.

Though I was sometimes more surprised at what my audience was gasping at more than the events in the movie, the melodrama is thick and sometimes funny, like when Julia Roberts hurls pill bottles. But August: Osage County kind of ended up being everything that I love and hate about the movies.  The artifice of it all, and the fun (look at Julia and Meryl goin' at it! look at all that Meryl actressing: the tapping of the lip to the itch behind the ear, all becoming a little too familiar in her physical technique) and mystique that that artifice sometimes brings--it all feels too complicated for Scantrons.  **1/2


-Jeffery Berg

Saturday, September 8, 2012

1982 in cinema: a post by dan braun

1982: the year which re-defined a decade – as well as modern cinema – and encapsulated our society, as well as the direction it was heading in.


48 Hrs. – The launch of a new cycle of both the buddy and the cop film.



Blade Runner – The template of the modern-day sci-fi thriller.



Come Back to the Five-and-Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean and Diner – What’s old is new again: heyday-era Woolworth’s and the neighborhood coffee-and-a-burger spot as places for reminiscing, bonding, growth and attempting to make sense of it all.



E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial and Poltergeist – Chronicles of the then-relatively new realities of suburban life in America: the sense of community – and of a seeming safe haven torn asunder.



Fast Times at Ridgemont High and Porky’s – The teen coming-of-age comedy meets SoCal surfing and shopping mall culture – and synthesizes the period-era (1950s), teen coming-of-age comedy with a decided 1980s influence.


First Blood – Vietnam and Reagan-era revenge meet and merge.



Gandhi – The story of a man of simple means achieving greatness within an epic setting – and the return of a cinematic era.



Night Shift and Tootsie – Dreaming and desire and trying to carve a niche within and outside of accepted societal 'norms.'



Sophie’s Choice – Being haunted by one’s past – and being confronted by difficult decisions which need to be made.



Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan – A modern-day classic resumes in its re-birth – and the contemporary blockbuster continues taking shape.

Monday, November 30, 2009